So we've got to come out of our crumbling towers and meet the people where they are. If we're going to have a new, better classics, public outreach is the place to build it - not endless faculty debates. For better or for worse, the courses will have to follow demand. 12/16
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I mean, there is always an iceberg problem - the average person might only need passing knowledge of something, the local teacher a lot more, the specialist who trains them far more and so on. Having that passing knowledge available requires the specialist at the far end.
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I know I keep linking the blog at you, but I detailed out that structure for history: https://acoup.blog/2020/07/09/collections-how-your-history-gets-made/ … I think history, as a field, has a really solid field-to-public chain (which is why I did history and not classics in that post).
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Yeah and I will say that for me history kind of starts in the early modern period. And I will say I am a public school teacher and I'm teaching a poor community. The classics are good but they need to understand why there are no jobs in their town.
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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